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Why Did I Renounce Ahmadiyah
Articles In English >>
Qadiyanism
Why did I Renounce
Ahmadiyyah
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"...I must say,
before God and man, that the more I scrutinized the claims and purported
references for them, the more I discovered that the Ahmadiyyah Mission is
deceiving
the world and playing on the ignorance of many of their followers." |
In a series of articles published in
Nigeria during 1974, Dr. Ismail A. B. Balogun, a high level Ahmadi leader,
refuted the tenets of Ahmadiyyah and publicly denounced the Movement he
had been born and raised in. A Professor of Islamic and Arabic Studies at the
University of Ibadan, Algeria, Dr. Balogun had dedicated his life to the cause
of Ahmadiyyah and had raised through the ranks to become a top spokesman
and ambassador for the Movement. Throughout the years, his well articulate and
emotional speeches had motivated many young Ahmadis. Similarly, his public
departure and the commotion and debates that pursued caused many educated
individuals to realize the truth and abandon Ahmadiyyah.
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Allah accept the repentance
of those who do evil in ignorance and repent soon afterwards; to them will
Allah turn in mercy: For Allah is full of knowledge and wisdom.
(The holy Quran, An-Nisa, 4:17) |
Subsequently, Dr. Balogun documented
the reasons for his withdrawal from the Movement and included some of the
ensuing debates in a book entitled "Islam versus Ahmadiyyah in Nigeria".
In this book, Dr. Balogun disclosed how he, as many other highly educated
individuals, had blindly accepted Ahmadiyyah out of loyalty to his
parents, misinformation disseminated by the Ahmadi leadership, divisive methods
of the Indo-Pakistani Ahmadi missionaries, and other subjective reasons having
more to do with propaganda and cultural habits than the truthfulness of any
movement.
Dr. Balogun recounts his upbringing
and his blind faith in the Indo-Pakistani Ahmadi missionaries in the following
passage:
"In my Childhood, I was brought up to revere the
Indo-Pakistani Ahmadiyyah missionaries who guided and controlled our religious
activities. When the mission came to our elders and, through the elders to us,
we believed all that they told us in toto, because of the implicit confidence
we had in them.
Their preaching appeared plausible to us and we
accepted their arguments in good faith. They made references to Islamic books
in order to substantiate their claims and we accepted the references without
cross-checking them because of our confidence in them.
Their method was to alienate us against the
orthodox Muslims in whom they found faults in the way they practiced Islam.
The missionaries claimed to present "the true Islam" to us in the name of
Ahmadiyyah.
They often impressed on us that the stiff
opposition, which Ahmadis suffered in India before the partition and
subsequently in Pakistan, was a conclusive proof of the truth of Ahmadiyyah.
After all, no prophet is readily accepted in his own town or country. This
also appeared plausible to us, hence we followed them with unalloyed
confidence." (Sunday Sketch, Nigeria, Sept. 29, 1974; Islam versus
Ahmadiyyah in Nigeria, p. 85-86)
Over a quarter of century ago, Dr.
Balogun had accurately identified the strategy employed by high level Ahmadi
missionaries to misguide the uninformed. Not only the missionaries do not
publicize a complete picture of their doctrine and history, but also they
distort the teachings of Islam and attempt to exasperate and capitalize upon
sectarian division among few ignorant Muslims.
Dr. Balogun testified:
"Even though Ahmadiyya has been in this country
for close to sixty years, I make the bold to say that, up till now, the vast
majority of the adherents of the organization, within both the Movement and
the Mission, are still in the dark about the details of its teaching, as well
as its purpose. For example, it was only very recently, when stiff opposition
to Ahmadiyyah started to rear its head in this country, that certain
high-ranking Ahmadis knew for the first time that Mirza Ghulam Ahmad claimed
to be a Prophet." (Sunday Times, Nigeria, Jan. 20, 1974; ibid., p. 3)
“[The fact that Ahmadis hid their true doctrine
from the membership at large is] evident in the fact that when one of the
young educated Nigerian Muslims, who originally invited the Movement here,
went to Britain for further studies and thereby came in contact with Indian
Ahmadis, who resided then in Britain, he studied them at first hand and
returned home only to withdraw his membership of the Movement. This was the
late al-Haj L. B. Agusto of blessed memory." (Sunday Times, Nigeria, Jan. 20,
1974; Ibid., p. 2)
Indeed, since its very inception, the
Ahmadi leadership has relied upon the well-proven methods of the Christian
Missionaries to alienate the uninformed individuals from knowledgeable and
sincere Muslims and selfishly increase their membership. They know only too well
that the descendants of individuals somehow tricked into joining their
organization are generally less likely to renounce their membership, even after
they discover the truth.
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Truly they found their
fathers on the wrong Path;
So they (too) were rushed down on their footsteps!
And truly before them, many of the ancients went astray;-
(The holy Quran, As-Saaffat, 37:69-71) |
Dr. Balogun records that, when in
1974, the Pakistani Government and the Muslim World League both declared the
Ahmadiyyah to be a non-Muslim group, he set out in earnest to defend the
Movement he was born into and prove its truthfulness. However, his scholarly and
thorough research into the teachings of Ahmadi leadership untangled a disturbing
web of deceit and left him with no alternative but to denounce the Mission. This
finding is even more significant since Dr. Balogun, even though a high level
Ahmadi and a Professor of Islamic Studies, had himself been kept in the dark for
over forty years.
Regarding the authenticity of the
alleged references and interpretations provided by the Ahmadi Missionaries, from
the Holy Quran, books of Hadith, and the writings of Muslim personalities, to
lend the appearance of support to their various claims, Dr. Balogun wrote:
"My aim [in cross-checking the references
offered by Ahmadi missionaries] was actually to strengthen myself against the
gathering opposition to Ahmadiyyah. As a University scholar, I was conscious
that my pronouncement in support of Ahmadiyyah must necessarily be backed with
authentic references to Islamic sources.
In my cross-checking of the Ahmadiyyah
missionaries' references, however, my findings were rather disappointing.
Consequent upon my first article on the
Ahmadiyyah problem in Nigeria (Sunday Times, 20 January 1974), the
Ahmadiyyah Mission members wrote extensive rejoinders which gave me a further
opportunity to examine, independently, more Ahmadiyyah claims and views than
hitherto.
I must say, before God and man, that the more I
scrutinized the claims and purported references for them, the more I
discovered that the Ahmadiyyah Mission is deceiving the world and playing on
the ignorance of many of their followers.
In many cases, they quote authors [scholars] who
are explicitly opposed to Ahmadiyyah ideas; but so cleverly do they quote that
they often give the impression that the authors support Ahmadiyyah views.
Examples of such distortions abound in the
quotations made by Dr. Bhutta in his rejoinder (Sunday Sketch, 8
September 1974) to my article. It may interest the readers to know that Dr.
Bhutta is himself a Pakistani Ahmadiyyah medical missionary.
It is only by going to the source references and
reading what the Ahmadis had quoted within the context in which they are set
that the reader, and the seeker after truth, will realize how much the
Pakistani Ahmadiyyah missionaries try to deceive the world." (Sunday Sketch,
Nigeria, Sept. 29, 1974; ibid., p. 86-87)
In support of his statements, Dr.
Balogun researched, exposed, and refuted many of the deceptive and false
arguments used by the Ahmadi missionaries to deceive the uninformed. For
instance, he wrote:
"In order to buttress their claim about
Khatam-un-Nabiyyin, the Ahmadis often quote the mystic Shaikh Muhyiddin Ibn 'Arabi
as saying, 'The Prophethood that was terminated with the person of the Prophet
of Allah(SAW) was no other than the Law-bearing Prophethood, and not
Prophethood itself.' (Futuhat al-Makkiyyah, Vol. II, p. 3)
This quoted statement appears on page 3 of the
book, which contains over 700 pages. The book does not stop at the statement
concerning the matter of Prophethood. On the contrary, it explains further at
length, covering eleven pages, pages 252 to 262 inclusive, in the same volume,
the different aspects of the Prophethood.
He says, among other things, that Prophethood
exists among both animate and inanimate objects. With regard to human beings,
he classified the Prophets into two: law-bearing prophets and follower
prophets. He explains the functions of each category and concludes in both
cases that, with the coming of the Prophet Muhammad, both categories have
ceased to appear.
He says that what would remain for Muslims after
Muhammad are speculators (Mujtahids) who would strive in their own different
ways to explain the Shariah to the people according to their understanding of
it. Such Mujtahids, he says, will NOT be called Prophets (Ibn Arabi, al-Futuhat
al-Makkiyyah, Vol. II, pp. 254 and 255). This is certainly known to the
Pakistani Ahmadi missionaries, but they hide it from their followers
deliberately in order to entrench their own false idea on Prophethood…
Another example of the distortions by the
Ahmadis for their selfish ends is contained in their official rejoinder to my
article already mentioned.
On page 5, column 2, of Monday 11 February 1974
issues of The Truth, the Ahmadiyyah Mission quoted the following in support of
the Prophethood of the Promised Messiah: 'There is no discrepancy between the
two, that he (the Messiah) will be a Prophet and a follower of the Holy
Prophet(SAW) for the purpose of explaining the commandments of his Shariah,
and to strengthen its way, even though he does so through his revelations.' (Mirqat
Sharh Miskat, Vol. 5, pg. 564)
This quotation has been extracted from the
explanation of the Hadith in which the Prophet Muhammad had declared that
there would be no other Prophet after him.
Indication. The Hadith, which is contained in
Mishkat al Masabih, reports that the Messenger of God said to 'Ali, 'You
are in the same position to me as Harun (Aaron) was to Musa (Moses): except
that there is no prophet after me'. The Mishkat reports also that
authentic books of Hadith are agreed on this tradition.
Now, in commenting on this authentic Hadith,
Imam 'Ali Qari, who was deceitfully quoted by Ahmadis, says:
"In the commentary of Muslim, some scholars
say concerning his [the Prophet's] statement 'Except that there is no
Prophet after me,' that it is an indication that whenever 'Isa b. Maryam
[Jesus Christ] descends, he will descend as one of the arbitrators of this
Community inviting people with the Law of Muhammad(SAW), and will not
descend as a Prophet.
I say that there is no inconsistency in his
being a Prophet and being a follower to our Prophet(SAW) concerning the
explanation of the rules of the Shariah and the improvement of his way even
with revelation to him, as indicated by the saying of the Prophet: 'If Moses
were alive he would have no choice but to follow me.'
That is even though he is described as a
Prophet and a Messenger; and in the absence of both of them (Prophethood and
Messengership), there will not be any additional attainment.
Interpretation. So, the meaning is that there
will not be any new Prophet after him because he is the Seal of all the
Prophets that had gone before.
In it (the statement) is an allusion that, if
there were to be a Prophet after him, it would have been 'Ali; and it is not
incompatible with what has clearly been related concerning the right of 'Umar
because the decision is hypothetical and suppositional.
It is as if he (the Prophet) says: 'If there
were to be a Prophet after me, a group of my Companions would have been
Prophets; but there is no Prophet after me.'
This is the meaning of the Prophet's(SAW)
saying: 'If Ibrahim had lived, he would have been a Prophet.'
As for the Hadith, which says, 'The scholars
of my Community are like the Israelites Prophets', memorizers like Zurkashi,
Asqalani, Damiri, and Suyuti have clearly said that is has no basis."
This quotation is from the same book and on the
same page referred to by the Ahmadiyyah Mission. That is: 'Ali al-Qari,
Mirqat al-Mafatih Sharh Mishkat al-Masabih, vol. 5, pg. 564.
It is clear from the quotation that the Mission
has extracted what they thought would support their erroneous view from a
commentary which, taken together, is explicitly opposed to the view. This is
in order to give the impression that the author supports their idea.
In educated circles, such act is an errant
distortion of an author's view and thought. It contradicts the international
law of copyright. It is, indeed, unacceptable as well as unbecoming of a
mission that wants itself to be taken seriously.
From the Islamic point of view also, it is an
abominable act. Consider, for example, Quran 2:59 [also 7:162], which says,
"The transgressors changed the statement from that which was made to them; so
We sent a pestilence from heaven upon the transgressors, for their having gone
astray.' A food for thought indeed for the Ahmadis!" (Sunday Sketch,
Nigeria, Sept. 29, 1974; ibid., p. 91-95)
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It is those who do not
believe in the Signs of Allah that forge falsehood: it is they who lie!
(The Holy Quran, An-Nahl, 16:105) |
No sooner had Dr. Balogun unearth
such evidence and discovered that the doctrine of Ahmadiyyah was contrary
to the authentic teachings of Islam, that he and many others abandoned the
Mission and embraced Islam. These fortunate individuals were blessed with the
capacity to differentiate the Truth from Falsehood and the sincere faith to
prefer Allah(SWT) and His Messenger(SAW) to the position, prestige, and
life-style they had achieved within the Organization. Truly, they were the
recipients of guidance from Allah(SWT).
Subsequent to such public
expositions, Dr. Balogun became the subject of personal attacks by many senior
Ahmadi missionaries. For instance, Molvi Ajmal Shahid, then the Amir of
Ahmadiyyah movement in Nigeria, provided an extremely short reply in which
he expressed his dismay at the "spiritual death of a brother (ibid., p. 97)" and
Moulvi Naseem Saifi, the chief Ahmadiyyah missionary for West Africa,
confirmed that Dr. Balogun had been very close and high in the administration
and expressed his sadness that Dr. Balogun had abandoned Ahmadiyyah in
favor of Islam (ibid., p. 99); other Ahmadi missionaries questioned his public
withdrawal and, in an attempt at damage control, advanced a number of unbecoming
and unproved accusations. In clarification, Dr. Balogun responded:
"I could have raised all the points in this
article with them (e.g. the Indo-Pakistani Ahmadi leadership) internally
without any publicity; but experience has shown that such criticisms will
automatically earn the critic either a long-term boycott or an outright
excommunication. With any of these, no other member will be prepared to listen
to him... I have stated my point of view, God is my witness, purely because of
my awareness of the responsibility incumbent on me towards my fellow Nigerian
Muslims in particular, and the world Muslims at large. My intention is not to
oppose Ahmadiyyah; I have lived in it long enough to have a soft spot for it
in my heart. But that notwithstanding, whenever a clash of opinion arises
between Islam and Ahmadiyyah, it behooves me to declare for Islam without
mincing words." (Sunday Times, Nigeria, Jan. 20, 1974; ibid., p.17)
“Furthermore, instead of being crossed with me,
calling me names and making all sorts of conjectures about me because of my
renunciation of Ahmadiyyah, let the Nigerian Ahmadis take my exposition to
their Pakistani missionaries for verification or denial.
Assertions. If they deny my assertions, then
demand from them the Arabic books (not Urdu translations) from which they took
their quotations. Then, let independent Arabic scholars translate the relevant
sections within their context.
If I am proved wrong, let my father reject and
disown me, and let the Ahmadis collectively curse and “crucify” me. But if I
am proved right, then it becomes incumbent on all Nigerian Ahmadis, including
my relations, both by blood and affinity, to reconsider their association with
Ahmadiyyah, pray fervently to God Almighty as I have done to show them the way
of Islam and help them to follow it.” (Sunday Sketch, Sept. 29, 1974;
ibid., p. 96)
Naturally, the personal attacks
levied against Dr. Balogun had nothing to do with the issue at hand and had been
orchestrated solely to confuse the naive. In truth, the deceptive methods of the
Mission had been exposed and independently verified by a number of individuals.
The damage done to the Mission was so great that it had to disband. Many Ahmadis
reorganized under the name of "Anwar-ul-Islam Movement" and rejected the
unIslamic doctrines which the Ahmadi leadership and missionaries had propagated
and sustained through their distortions and misrepresentations of the authentic
teachings of Islam (Daily Times, Monday, Nov. 25, 1974; ibid., p. 121).
May Allah(SWT) guide every sincere Ahmadi to Islam.
Among the individuals, who witnessed
the written public debates between Dr. Balogun and the high level Ahmadi
missionaries and recognized the falsehood of the Mission, was a well-known
gentleman by the name of Mr. Alhaj A. S. Olatunde. To save face and mislead
their naive followers, Ahmadi missionaries apparently had began a rumor that Br.
Olatunde had recognized their "truth" and accepted Ahmadiyyah! In
response, Br. Olatunde issued a public statement, which is reproduced below:
“For some months now, I have been quiet. My
quietness has come as a result of a very serious study I embarked upon in
connection with a burning question.
The question began with an article published by
Dr. Ismail Balogun of the University of Ibadan a few months ago. It concerned
the belief of the Ahmadiyya Jamat that the founder of the organization was a
kind of a prophet.
Dr. Ismail Balogun, who was born into the
Ahmadiyya Community, advanced cogent arguments and reasons to support his
rebuttal of the claim of Mirza Ghulam Ahmad to Prophethood and the need to
abandon the name Ahmadiyya to denote a class of Muslims.
A series of rejoinders came from many well-known
Ahmadis. The most significant thing about the rejoinders is that they are
unconvincing! They have been based on shifty premises.
Dr. Ismail Balogun came out again with a final
reply to all the rejoinders. His final reply contained incontrovertible facts
from various books of Islam and lexicons to support his stand that after the
holy Prophet Muhammad there had not been and there would never be another
prophet of any kind, at least in so far as Islam is concerned.
I want to make my personal stand clear now. I
support Dr. Ismail Balogun. I agree entirely with his findings. And with him I
declare that Muhammad is the last Prophet of God.
I also declare that I am not an Ahmadi. It is
true that I have been closely connected with the Ahmadiyya Mission for many
years. During my period of association with them, the question of another
prophet after Muhammad was never a point of interest in our discussions.
I am sure with this, nobody will be in doubt any
more about my stand. I want to remind all Muslims of an incident toward the
close of the glorious life of the Holy Prophet Muhammad. It was the parting
sermon he delivered on the Arafat in his last pilgrimage.
He said: "I am leaving unto you two noble
things. So long as you will cling to them, you will never go astray. One of
them is the Book of Allah and the other is the Tradition of His Apostle. Let
him that is present tell unto him that is absent. Haply he that shall be told
may remember better than he who has heard it."
With me, the Book of Allah and the Sunnah of His
Prophet are sufficient. I am a Muslim and anything that will tarnish my Islam
is rejected with all my heart.
If there is any person or any group of persons
who have been showing me any favor because they thought that I was an Ahmadi,
I pray, they should now withhold or withdraw their favors. I shall be
satisfied with whatever favors it will please Allah to bestow on me as a
Muslim, pure and simple. May Allah open our hearts to His Truth. Amen.” (Daily
Sketch, Friday, Nov. 8, 1974; ibid. p. 118-119)
Obviously, a movement whose very
leaders and founders have used such deceptive methods to misguide the
uninformed, for a hundred years, can not be taken seriously nor viewed as a
divine organization. Each one of the arguments Ahmadi leaders have advanced in
support of their organization is similarly based on deceptive claims or pure
conjecture and has been solely invented to keep their unfortunate followers
confused and entrapped.
We hope that individuals who have
mistakenly followed Ahmadiyyah reconsider their standing in the light of
all the evidence uncovered by Dr. Balogun. Should those, who have been touched
by the miracles of the Holy Quran and the teachings of the last Prophet
Muhammad(SAW), exhibit loyalty and obedience to Allah(SWT) and His last
Messenger(SAW) or to individuals whose deception and falsehood has been
continually exposed?
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Those who reject Allah,
hinder (men) from the Path of Allah, and resist the Messenger, after
Guidance has been clearly shown to them, will not injure Allah in the least,
but He will make their deeds of no effect.
(The holy Quran, Muhammad, 47:32) |
Quotes taken from:
"Islam versus Ahmadiyyah in Nigeria", Published by Sh. Muhammad Ashraf,
Kashmiri Bazar, Lahore, Pakistan
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